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There Is Nothing Wrong With Red Meat

There Is Nothing Wrong With Red Meat

 

Contrary to what many experts would have you believe there is nothing wrong with eating red meat. Official health recommendations called for Americans to cut back on their red meat consumption several years ago and ever since red meat has been regarded by most as potentially hazardous to your health. The irony is that the ‘science’ used to come to these conclusions was not at all a matter of science, but conjecture. Back in the 1970′s when the relationship between cholesterol and heart disease was established, saturated fats became the enemy. So much so that many prominent official health  organizations recommended switching from traditional foods high in saturated fat to ones containing partially hydrogenated oils, or trans fats. Margarine was preferred over butter and red meat- a high source of saturated fats was put into the verboten category, cited as increasing risks of heart disease, colon cancer and type two diabetes. We know today that these recomendations were completely flawed- as trans fats have been identified as a strong causative factor in the very ailments they were supposed to prevent. We also know that the whole cholesterol causes heart attacks theory is flawed. Researchers today observe that half the people who get heart attacks don’t have high cholesterol levels and half the people with high cholesterol levels don’t get heart attacks. Yet still there is a herd type mentality that takes the flawed sciences of the nutritional authorities as gospel truth.

Red Meat Has Been Consumed Regularly for Thousands Of Years Without Any Problems

 

To condemn red meat as potentially unhealthy is to ignore the several hundred thousand years of our evolutionary history where red meat was a main source of protein. Metabolic disease was not prevalent at that time, nor were high incidences of colon cancer and obesity. Equally ignored were the eating habits of other cultures where red meat has continued to be a staple for generations. Koreans eat a substantial amount of red meat in their diets, with those that can afford it eating beef several times a week. Pork- another often vilified meat is also a firm part of the Korean diet and yet according to data from the National Cancer Institute, Korean women have one of the lowest cancer rates on the planet.  For Korean males, the cancer rate is slightly higher but still lower than that of the United States, but most importantly rates for colon and rectal cancer for beef-eating Koreans are extremely low- in spite of their high beef consumption. Incidences of cardiovascular disease in Korea is also significantly lower averaging  21 per 100,000, compared to 66.8 per 100,000 here in the U.S.  

Large Scale Review Finds That Processed Meats- Not Red Meat In Its Natural Form Can Increase Risk Of Diet Related Illnesses

 

Interestingly enough a recent Harvard review of twenty different studies of several thousand people found that there was no correlation between red meat intake and coronary heart disease. The studies did find that processed meat intake was associated with a 42% higher risk of heart disease and a 19% increase in risk of type 2 diabetes. The study concluded that it is the consumption of processed meats, not red meats that is associated with higher incidence of coronary heart disease and diabetes mellitus. Once again the problem lies not with natural foods but their man made food product derivatives. Food products like hot dogs, bacon, cold cuts and deli meats all fall into that category and my recommendation would be to remove them from your diet completely. The way in which beef in particular is raised here in the U.S. still raises some concerns, and so it is always best to pay a few dollars more for beef that isn’t raised using modern intensive farming methods. As ‘science’ is slowly learning, the more processed a food is, the less like it is going to be good for the human body, but the foods that we have been eating for several thousand years are aleays the better choice.

 

References: 
Red and Processed Meat Consumption and Risk of Incident Coronary Heart Disease, Stroke, and Diabetes Mellitus. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis- Renata Micha RD, PhD*, Sarah K. Wallace BA, and Dariush Mozaffarian MD, DrPH

 

 

Kevin Richardson is the creator of Naturally Intense High Intensity Training 10 Minute Workouts™ and one of the most sought after personal trainers in New York City. Get a copy of his free weight loss ebook here.

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